The News-Times

Giants show promise in Judge’s first season

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants weren’t blaming anyone for missing the playoffs in their first season under rookie coach Joe Judge.

After starting 0-5 and winning one of their first eight games in a season overshadow­ed by a pandemic and games played in nearempty stadiums, the Giants (6-10) were lucky to have a shot at winning the NFC East on Sunday night.

It all came down to the

Eagles beating Washington (7-9) in Philadelph­ia. The Eagles had a shot at helping the Giants until coach Doug Pederson pulled quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts in the fourth quarter to give thirdstrin­ger Nate Sudfeld some snaps.

Washington won 20-14 to capture the division and end the Giants’ hopes for their first playoff berth since 2016.

“I was angry because I know that we had 16 opportunit­ies to make it happen,” safety Jabrill Peppers said

Monday. “Any time you put your destiny in another man’s hands, you know, it simply doesn’t bode well for you.”

While six wins is not a lot, the Giants came a long way in a season that was held without offseason training activities, minicamp and had a shortened training camp with no preseason games.

A former Patriots special teams coordinato­r, the recently turned 39-year-old Judge and his staff took over a team that won 12 games in the past three years. They installed everything virtually until hitting camp in August.

Judge got what he wanted: a hard-nosed, well-prepared team. The Giants were in most of their games, and lost five by eight points or less, including four times by four points or less.

“We didn’t to make the playoffs, but I think we’re trending upward,” center Nick Gates said. “Joe Judge is doing a really good job changing the culture in this place. And, you know, everything is trending upward.”

After one season, Judge is clearly in control.

Early in the season, firstround draft pick Andrew Thomas showed up late for a meeting before a home game against Washington and did not start at left tackle.

Veteran receiver Golden Tate complained on national television about not having enough passes thrown in his direction after catching a touchdown against Tampa Bay. He was benched the following weekend.

Before the bye week in

November, offensive line coach Marc Colombo argued with Judge when told Dave DeGuglielm­o was being brought in as a consultant. Colombo was fired the next day and “Gugs” took over.

It reminded many of something Super Bowl champion coaches Tom Coughlin or Bill Parcells might have done. The Giants’ hopes Judge reaches the same heights.

TWO SIDES

Coming into the season, Daniel Jones, Saquon Barkley and the offense were supposed to be carry the team. It never worked out that way for new coordinato­r Jason Garrett.

Barkley, the 2018 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year, was lost for the season in the second game with a major knee injury. Jones struggled early playing behind a rebuilt offensive line, and points were hard to get. New York finished with 280 points, 31st in the league behind the Jets’ 243.

Garrett’s future is uncertain. He may want a head coaching job or Judge might want someone else calling the plays.

The defense under coordinato­r Pat Graham was the surprise. He inherited one of the NFL’s worst units and finished the season ranked

12th, including 10th against the run.

Defensive end Leonard Williams had a career year with 111⁄ sacks. Cornerback

2

James Bradberry gave New York a shutdown cover man, and inside linebacker Blake Martinez was a tackling machine with 151.

While special teams struggled late, placekicke­r Graham Gano finished the season 31 of 32, making his last 30 field goal attempts.

THE O-LINE

The offensive line came a long way despite seeing Colombo fired in November.

The unit finished with two rookies on the left side, Gates playing center for the first time in his career, and two veterans on the right side: guard Kevin Zeitler and tackle Cam Fleming. Rookie tackle Matt Peart also showed promise at times.

Thomas overcame early struggles against outstandin­g players and played well. Shane Lemieux stepped in for Will Hernandez after the left guard tested positive for

COVID-19. He never lost the job and Hernandez become the odd man out.

This unit, which gave up

50 sacks, is only going to get better .

GETTLEMAN FUTURE

General manager Dave Gettleman will turning 70 next month and one has to wonder how much longer he wants to do this.

Hiring Judge, the team’s improved play, recent good drafts and making the trade with the Jets for Williams last season and then franchisin­g him are all positives.

Knowing Gettleman, he would never walk away until the job of making the Giants a yearly contender is done. However, he beat lymphoma in 2018 and it’s got to be tough working in an environmen­t threatened daily by COVID-19. If he leaves, health concerns might be the reason.

FREE AGENCY

Williams, fellow lineman Dalvin Tomlinson, running back Wayne Gallman, Fleming and linebacker Kyler Feckrell are unrestrict­ed free agents.

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